Correspondence from York to Sheff Re: Photograph for Annual Report
Correspondence
May 27, 1993
4 pages
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Case Files, Sheff v. O'Neill Hardbacks. Correspondence from York to Sheff Re: Photograph for Annual Report, 1993. b7c42e9f-a346-f011-877a-002248226c06. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/11c696e9-63dd-4c1b-bcb0-b3b0b6171854/correspondence-from-york-to-sheff-re-photograph-for-annual-report. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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i NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE 99 Hudson Street (
AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC. New York, N.Y. 10013-2897 (212) 219-1900 Fax: (212) 226-7592
May 27, 1993
Ms. Elizabeth Sheff
144 Mark Twain Drive
Hartford, Connecticut 06112
Dear Ms. Sheff:
| would like permission to use the photograph of you and your son, Milo,
taken by Hartford Courant Photographer Cloe Poisson that appeared in the
Thursday, April 27, 1989, issue of The Hartford Courant on the front page (1A).
For your convenience, | have attached a copy of the photograph that ran with a
news story about Hartford's school desegregation case, Sheff v. O'Neil, in which
you are the lead plaintiff.
The photo will be reprinted one time only and will appear in the 1992
Annual Report of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. in our
education litigation section along with an account of LDF’s participation in the
case.
| have already received permission from The Hartford Courant for the use
of this photograph, giving the newspaper a credit for the photo, in our annual
report.
LDF’s 1992 Annual Report has a circulation of 10,000 and the recipients
include Legal Defense Fund supporters and contributors as well as other
members of the national civil rights community.
As you know from your longtime relationship with LDF, we are a non-profit,
civil rights law firm and we do not make a profit on our annual report.
We would like for you to read, fill-out, sign and quickly mail back to us the
enclosed release form giving us permission to use the photograph of you and
your son in the Legal Defense Fund's 1992 Annual Report. A stamped, return-
addressed envelope has been enclosed for your convenience.
Regional Offices
Contributions are The NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) is not part Suite 301 Suite 208
deductible for U.S. of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 1275 K Street, NW 315 West Ninth Street
income tax purposes. (NAACP) although LDF was founded by the NAACP and shares its Washington, DC 20005 Los Angeles, CA 90015
commitment to equal rights. LDF has had for over 30 years a separate (202) 682-1300 (213) 624-2405
Board, program, staff, office and budget. Fax: (202) 682-1312 Fax: (213) 624-0075
Ms. Sheff
Page 2
In advance, we thank you for your cooperation and speedy response to our
request.
Sincerely,
QQ —
Marva York
Writer/Editor
cc: Elaine Jones
Theodore Shaw
Ron Ellis |
Marianne Engelman Lado
Date
1, (Print Name), give the NAACP Legal
Elizabeth Sheff
Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. permission to use a photograph of me
and my son, (Print Name), in the Legal
Milo
Defense Fund’s 1992 Annual Report.
(Signature)
*Note: Please fill-out, sign and return this form in the enclosed stamped,
return-addressed envelope.
a —
ABUSED 1 TRS DAILY EDITION VOL JLING 117
"
The 2
THURSDAY APRIL 27, 1989— J SECTICNS
rreww " COPYRIGHT 1989. THE HARTFORD COURANT C2
.
Suit could redr
Dese gregation action
fights city-suburb split
on
suit at a glance
# The piadertifts: 17 children, 15
from Hartford and two from West
B Where: The suit will be filed m
Hartford Supenor Court.
H When: Papers will be served
on the defendants and filed in
court today.
By ROBERT A. FRAHM
Courant Education Writer
Civil rights leaders will file a long-
awaited scnool desegregation lawsuit
today that couid radically change
Connecticut's long-standing system of
separate city and suburban school dis-
trices.
The suit on behalf of a black Hart-
ford fourth grader and 16 other chil-
dren and teenagers challenges a sys-
tem under which city and suburban
schools have grown increasingly seg-
regated in the past two decades.
The 29-page complaint will be filed
in Superior Court against Gov. Wil-
liam A. O'Neill and other officials,
charging that racially segregated
schools in Hartford violate the Con-
necticut Consutution. lawyers said.
“Evervbody beiieves the only way
we will get any action. good or bad. up
. or down. is through court litigation.”
said Jonn C. Brittain, a University of
Connecticut law professor and one of
10 lawyers who will argue the case.
The lawsuit, which could take years
to resolve. does not outline specific
proposals for ending racial segrega-
tion in Hartford. where minority stu-
dents make up 91 percent of public
school enrollment. However, a soiu-
tion undoubtedly would inciude the
busing of students between the city
and its mostly white suburbs, Brittain
See Race, Page Al2
10-year-old 1s showing
‘spirit of the struggle’
By ROBERT A. FRAHM
Courant Education Writer
Milo Sheff. a black fourth grader
who likes to paint and play a game
called fireball, will become the lead-
ing symbol in the legal battle over
school desegregation in Connecticut.
The prospect of instant fame and
intense media attention doesn’t rattle
the outgoing, talkative 10-year-old.
“I'm .not thinking about that,” he
said. “I'm thinking about better edu-
cation for me and the kids after me.”
A student at Annie Fisher School,
where 99 percent of the students are
black or Hispanic, Milo will become
the lead plainuff in Sheff vs. O'Neill. a
desegregation lawswt namung Gov.
William A. O*Netll and other state
officials.
“Milo has the soint of the struggie.”
said Elizapeth Sheff, a civil nights
activist who, along with other parents,
brought the suit on behalf of 17 black,
Puerto Rican and white children from
the Hartford area.
“Milo and [ have discussed this.”
said Sheff, a woman whose first brush
with social upheaval came as a teen-
ager “when [ was tear-gassed in the
'60s.”
See 10-vear-old, Page Al12
chool lines
Cioe Poisson / The Harttorg Couram
BH Elizabeth Sheff and her son, Milo, 10, of Hartford, are key participants in Sheff vs. O° Neill, a lawsuit
to be filed today. The suit will comtend that schools in Hartford are racially segregated, in violation of
the state constitution. Milo is one of 17 plaintiffs in the case. His mother is a longtime social activist.